Discursive Acts

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A01=Robert Perinbanayagam
Adversative Conjunction
Author_Robert Perinbanayagam
Casual Prose
Category=JHB
Category=QD
clothes
Continuous Predicate
conversational analysis
dialogic interaction theory
Dialogic Moment
Discursive Acts
Discursive Interactions
Discursive Practices
Effectual Interpretant
eq_bestseller
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
ethnomethodology
Incipient Acts
Informed Person
Intentional Interpretant
interactional linguistics
Lonnie Athens
Objective Mimesis
Peirce Argued
Phase VII
play
Play Clothes
Pragmatic Maxim
pragmatics
Presidential Transcripts
Robert Kevelson
Scheherazade's Stories
Scheherazade’s Stories
semiotic theory
social meaning construction
Social Psychological Functions
Story's Implications
Story’s Implications
Transformational Apparatus
Vocal Gestures
Young Men

Product details

  • ISBN 9780202363530
  • Weight: 408g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 15 Sep 2010
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Inc
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Language, Signs and Selves applies conversational analysis to the discourse of everyday life and its roles in social behavior. The explanation offered of the complex elements and processes of language use is theoretically and empirically grounded, synthesizing European post structuralist theory and semiotics with American pragmatist currents.

This book parallels work done under other rubrics sociolinguistics, conversation and discourse analysis, and ethnomethodology. This work, however, presents the same matter from a different standpoint. While enthnomethodology and sociolinguistics focus on certain formal properties of conversations, they have pursued the quest for these properties with great methodological rigor, while avoiding questions about intentions. In their work, as in that of many structuralists, discourse has become depersonalized, with the linguistic form itself becoming an independent entity sealed from the world of selves, interaction, conflict, and suffering. Perinbanayagam's interest is in displaying the dialogic properties of such discourses, conceiving each element in them as pragmatic and directed.

In many ways Language, Signs and Selves is an enlargement and exemplification of themes discussed in the analysis of language, interactions, and social relationships. The author takes dialogue to be the central event of human being and doing and argues that it is the defining principle of all actions and interactions. Drawing from a variety of sources, he seeks to construct a theory of interaction between humans that is dialectical in all senses of the word; that is to say, a theory concerned with dialects and double processes, as well as with speaking and the logic of relational processes.

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